Maiden voyage for locomotive named after young boy
A steam locomotive, which has been restored in memory of a boy from Plymstock, has made its maiden voyage.
The 'Lord Oliver Brown' locomotive at the Plym Valley Railway made its first journey in 17 years on Sunday, on what would have been Oliver Brown's 17th birthday.
Oliver died aged 11 from Myelodysplastic Syndrome which affects only four in a million children worldwide.
Hundreds of people gathered at the station to wave the train off on its first journey.
The 1959 engine was painted in Oliver's favourite colour - hot pink - and the shades of green represent Children's Hospice South West, where he was looked after before he died.
Oliver's mum, Nicky Brown, said: "I'm so incredibly proud, it's wonderful to see everybody come together to celebrate Children's Hospice South West, who continue to take care of us as a family.
"Just looking at the train epitomises Oliver, it's so bright and colourful and it just makes you smile - that's what Oliver did every day of his life.
"He would be in his element today and I'm just so proud that we can wish him happy birthday in such a remarkable way," she added.
Oliver's brother Ben, who helped with the restoration of the engine, said: "It's exciting to have everyone here - it's been a big project for a long time now and hopefully we can bring awareness not just to our story, but to other families and help them out.
"Oliver loved pink, he loved trains - every time he got out of the hospital the first thing he'd do would be to go to West Hoe and get on the Gus Honeybun trains.
"It's amazing, such a nice atmosphere - seeing other people having fun and enjoying the train, it's a great day."
Annabel Roberts from Children's Hospice South West said the train was a fantastic way to raise awareness of the work the charity does.
"The amount of effort that has gone into this train is absolutely astonishing.
"It's such a beautiful spectacle, such a beautiful thing and I think it will appeal to loads of people who will be entranced by this locomotive - it's unique."
She added: "We're so fortunate to have them [Oliver's family] as fantastic champions for our charity and the services we provide."
Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@bbc.co.uk.
Steam train restored in memory of boy, 11
Charity given £25,000 boost for railway project
Childrens Hospice South West
Plym Valley Railway
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution lays bare shocking figures, but it doesn't have any answers
Special educational needs and disabilities – better known in the media these days by the punchy acronym SEND – are a hot topic in education. For a long time considered a marginal issue for disruptive children, the discourse has shifted in recent years as parents have pressured schools into better accommodation for young people with neurodiverse conditions, like autism, ADHD and dyslexia. It is the last of these which has found a champion in the form of TV chef Jamie Oliver, whose crusade on behalf of Britain's dyslexics is captured in a new Channel 4 documentary, Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution. 'I've been doing this for 20 years,' Oliver tells a room full of assembled politicians. 'I've been through 17 heads of education and many, many prime ministers.' He is referring, of course, to his 2004 campaign to reform school dinners, which made him, briefly, the most hated man in Britain's schoolyards. It wasn't just children who critiqued his advocacy: he was accused, too, of being part of a wealthy elite propagating top-down paternalism. And yet for all the political and social change since the start of the millennium, Oliver's televisual persona has remained the same. An approachable Jack the Lad, no controversy seems capable of denting his portfolio career, including countless television shows, wildly successful cookbooks and novels aimed at children, and a restaurant group. And this has all been achieved while struggling with a form of dyslexia that makes reading and writing a challenge for him. 'You're probably better at reading than me now,' he tells his eight-year-old-son. 'And I'm the second biggest author in the country.' And so, donning the same hat he used to eradicate turkey twizzlers from school cafeterias, Oliver sets off to raise awareness of how dyslexic children are being failed. The statistics are worrying: 10 per cent of the population are believed to be dyslexic, and, when rolled up with other neurodiverse conditions, that number rises to 25 per cent. More shocking still is the show's claim that 50 per cent of the prison population is dyslexic, which feels, instinctively, a direct corollary of the fact that 90 per cent of excluded children are neurodiverse. SEND parents – who have become one of Britain's most powerful lobbying groups – will know all of this, but for the lay viewer the figures will be troubling. Equally concerning, however, is the lack of answers. And this is an area where Channel 4 and Jamie Oliver struggle to make inroads. Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution involves much rumination on the current state of play, but the mooted insurrection of the education system is harder to pin down. Earlier intervention seems important (children are not assessed until they are eight, and even then, it is not mandatory), but what then? More training for teachers, similarly, is highlighted, but the nature and application of that training remain elusive. It is no bad thing for Oliver to simply use his platform to raise awareness of an issue, but when you call it a 'revolution', it feels like there should be some clearer glimpse of the promised land. Because, as the show suggests, there is little appetite to throw more money at the education system right now. A room full of Britain's politicians show their support for the endeavour (including Liberal Democrat MP Adam Dance revealing that dyslexia-related bullying caused him to attempt to take his own life as a young person), but commitments remain vague. Education secretary Bridget Phillipson, when she appears, looks like she'd rather be anywhere else. 'Will we be seeing some radical, strategic restructuring of teacher training?' Oliver asks her. She lethargically straight-bats his questions. 'Money alone isn't enough,' she mumbles, perhaps thinking of the multimillion-pound bill left to town councils by the collapse of Oliver's restaurant chain. 'I think we have to reform the system.' But reform, like revolution, is an easy word to say, and a harder one to enact. And so, at the climax of Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution, as a crowd of supporters assemble outside parliament, there's an air of optimism. SEND support has never been higher on the political agenda, and Oliver, one of the most effective agitators in Britain, has played his part in this. But the show mirrors the great challenge of modern politics. It's far easier to identify problems – to point to injustice – than it is to locate their solutions, and, in doing so, initiate the sort of change that a revolution requires.


Buzz Feed
4 days ago
- Buzz Feed
Old-Fashioned Baby Names Showdown Quiz
For a while there, it seemed like EVERYONE was trying to come up with the most clever, new, unique baby name. Now, Oliver and Emma are back to being trendy. If only English authors of the 1800s could see us now! ✨ The 32 baby names in this quiz were popular in the 1920s. One hundred years later, do they deserve a second life? Sign up for a BuzzFeed Community account to make your own Showdown now!
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Yahoo
Jamie Oliver's plan for pop-up bakery at stables
Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver is hoping to get the go-ahead for a pop-up bakery at his counntryside home. The 50-year-old, who lives near Finchingfield, in Essex, had applied for planning permission to temporarily change his estate's former stables into a pop-up bakery for a month. In the application, it stated the proposed building would be used as a "pop-up bakery (predominantly on a takeaway basis) for the month of August 2025." Braintree District Council will take a decision on the proposal. Oliver rose to fame in the late 1990's with the BBC Two series The Naked Chef and has spent much of his career trying to improve school lunch nutrition. The application states the bakery would operate seven days a week from 09:00 BST to 17:00. The bakery would require three deliveries per week and provide work for six employees. Public access would be restricted to the main room, which is on the ground floor of the stables. Representatives for Oliver said they are looking to explore the idea but nothing was confirmed. Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. Jamie Oliver inspires schoolchildren to cook Jamie Oliver on struggling with dyslexia at school